Friday, July 29, 2005



Four signs she's high maintenance


Most men have been there. Many won’t admit they’ve been there: involved with a high-maintenance date or girlfriend. You can run from a high-maintenance woman and you can hide, but your best chance of going unharmed is to avoid her all together.

Consumers who purchase cars, light trucks, pick-ups and SUVs that run on diesel will be able to take advantage of a tax credit worth between $400 and $2,400 a vehicle now offered for hybrid vehicles, according to the Diesel Technology Forum. The greater the fuel efficiency savings of the vehicle the larger the credit.

Senators voted 74 to 26 to enact a measure that touches on virtually every aspect of American energy production and consumption, from new nuclear power plants to energy efficient appliances. The bill provides $14.5 billion in tax breaks, encourages much greater use of renewable fuels and takes steps to make the power grid more reliable.

"This bill represents a compromise," said Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., expressing the view of a number of Democrats who had pushed for greater conservation and efficiency provisions in the bill but seemed satisfied with the final deal crafted by House and Senate negotiators.
Cantwell said the bill is "not a complete answer to all of our energy needs ... but it is an important first step."

A crucial win for the electric utilities is the repeal of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, which would ease industry merger rules put in place to protect consumers from monopolistic utilities.
"This change should assist in the approval process of the Duke-Cinergy merger," according to a research note from RBC Capital Markets, referring to the proposed merger of Duke Energy Corp. (DUK: news, chart, profile) and Cinergy Corp. (CIN: news, chart, profile) announced in May.
New facilities that generate electricity from renewable energy sources such as wind power that are started up by the close 2007 would receive a 10-year production tax credit at a cost of $2.75 billion.
Firms that invest in wind power sites such as FPL Corp. (FPL: news, chart, profile) , Berkshire Hathaway's (BRKA: news, chart, profile) Iowa-based MidAmerican, and Scottish Power's (SPI: news, chart, profile) PPM Energy, would benefit from this provisions, according to Christine Tezak, an electricity analyst with Stanford Washington Research Group.
Coal-burning power plants built after 1975 and outfitted with pollution control devices since then would be able to depreciate costs over seven years. Some of the nation's largest utilities may be eligible for the credit including AES Corp. (AES: news, chart, profile) , American Electric Power Co. (AEP: news, chart, profile) , Entergy Corp. (ETR: news, chart, profile) , Progress Energy Inc. (PGN: news, chart, profile) , Southern Co. (SO: news, chart, profile) , Reliant Energy Inc. (RRI: news, chart, profile) , TXU Energy (TXU: news, chart, profile) , and Xcel Energy (XEL: news, chart, profile) , according to Tezak.
Power companies that undertake new high-voltage transmission projects would also be eligible for 15-year depreciation rather than the standard 20-years, at a cost of $1.2 billion to Treasury.

Senza parole:
Ma come si fa a resistere per non ridere.
Il buon Bobo e' sempre il piu' grande.
Vai Bobo.












Incentivi per chi scommette sul "solare"
Un decreto delle Attività produttive concede un bonus sul surplus prodotto e venduto alla rete elettrica

IL SOLE 24 ORE

Il “solare” apre le porte a famiglie, condomini e imprese.
Via, dunque, agli incentivi per chi scommette sul fotovoltaico. È in arrivo sulla Gazzetta Ufficiale un decreto del ministero delle Attività produttive, di concerto con l’Ambiente, per l’incentivazione dell’energia elettrica di origine solare prodotta con impianti fotovoltaici. Si tratta, in pratica, di incentivi in conto energia, che arriveranno con l’energia prodotta in surplus, venduta alla rete elettrica a tariffe incentivate, pari a tre volte la tariffa media delle forniture di energia elettrica. La tariffa è differenziata in base alla potenza dell’impianto, che dovrà, dunque, essere in esercizio e sottoposto a manutenzione.«Un decreto complesso – sottolinea Claudio Scajola, ministro delle Attività produttive – che arriva in ritardo, ma è molto significativo in un Paese che ha bisogno di energia». Una produzione di energia a bassissimo impatto ambientale, può aiutare a risolvere una questione, quella dell'energia, che secondo Altero Matteoli, ministro dell'Ambiente, «é il problema diquesto inizio secolo».In passato gli incentivi venivano dati in forma di finanziamento per gli impianti, come i 10mila tetti fotovoltaici che hanno visto coinvolte per lo più amministrazioni locali. Gli incentivi Per un impianto da 20 kilowatt di una famiglia o di un piccolo condominio il decreto prevede che i consumatori continuino a d avere la possibilità, per esempio di notte, di acquistare energia dalla rete, ma anche di vendere quella prodotta in eccesso. Tutto viene registrato su un contatore e a fine anno si effettua il conguaglio: l’energia acquistata dalla rete costa 15 centesimi al kilowatt, tasse comprese, su quella venduta alla rete c’è un incentivo di 45 centesimi al kilowatt, più il prezzo pagato dalla rete. Il problema è rappresentato dal costo base dell’impianto fotovoltaico, che per un kW, che copre circa 10mila metri quadrati, ha un costo di circa 7mila euro e produce in media 1.100 kWh l’anno.L’Autorità per l’energia elettrica e il gas è chiamata a determinare le modalità per la copertura degli incentivi tramite un prelievo sulle tariffe elettriche (circa 0,014 centesimi di euro per ogni kWh) e a individuare l’organismo erogatore dell’incentivo (Cassa conguaglio per il settore elettrico), con le relative modalità tecniche.Saranno previsti quattro bandi l’anno: per i piccoli basterà una semplice domanda con il progetto preliminare, per i grandi è prevista una gara per innescare un processo di competitività tecnologica. Il beneficio riguarda l’installazione di 100 MW di impianti fotovoltaici, di cui il 60% per impianti piccoli e medi, la restante parte per quelli grandi, che hanno una potenza massima installabile di 1 MW. Una volta concesso l’incentivo il soggetto è tenuto ad avviare i lavori di realizzazione dell’impianto fotovoltaico entro 6 mesi dalla comunicazione (12 per gli impianti oltre 50 kW) e concluderli entro 12 mesi (24 oltre 50 kW). Altri 6 mesi sono, poi, a disposizione per la messa a punto e il collaudo dell’impianto.
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Telegraph News Shuttle commander surprised by debris problem

Colonel Eileen Collins, the commander of the space shuttle Discovery, has said she was surprised and disappointed that the debris problem that brought down Columbia in 2003 had re-emerged.

Col Collins, 48, said: "What I'd like to say is this is something that has to be fixed. I don't think we should fly again unless we do something to prevent this from happening again."

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Tor: An anonymous Internet communication system

Tor: An anonymous Internet communication system

Tor is a toolset for a wide range of organizations and people that want to improve their safety and security on the Internet. Using Tor can help you anonymize web browsing and publishing, instant messaging, IRC, SSH, and other applications that use the TCP protocol. Tor also provides a platform on which software developers can build new applications with built-in anonymity, safety, and privacy features.
The 46 Best-ever Freeware Utilities
The 46 Best-ever Freeware Utilities

There are a lot of great freeware products out there. Many are as good or even better than their commercial alternatives.
Priest and His Son Are Bound by Poverty

Single and unemployed, Stephanie Collopy asked a Portland judge this month to order her son's father to increase her child support and to add their chronically ill boy to his health insurance plan.

Sitting on the witness stand in a white button-down shirt, gray slacks and blue blazer with a small gold cross on the lapel, Arturo Uribe — the 12-year-old boy's father — had an unusual defense: He is a Roman Catholic priest.



Uribe, who was a seminarian when he fathered the boy during a consensual affair with Collopy, had taken a vow of poverty and therefore had no money to support his son, he told the court. Now pastor of the 4,000-family St. Mary of the Assumption Roman Catholic Church in Whittier, Uribe had never seen the boy, who was born in 1993.And as for health insurance, Uribe said his plan — tailored for priests, nuns and brothers — didn't provide for children.Uribe's legal argument worked.Multnomah County Judge Keith Meisenheimer ruled that Uribe only had to continue his $323-a-month child support, paid by his religious order, the Redemptorists. And while the jurist instructed Uribe, 47, to formally ask his health plan carrier if an exception could be made for his son, the priest wasn't ordered to provide insurance.Like other women whose children were fathered by Catholic priests, Collopy, 38, could get only limited help from the legal system, which decides child support based on a parent's income. Although dioceses and orders often have considerable wealth, most Catholic priests — especially those in religious orders — make little or no money. Their living expenses are paid for by the church.Canon, or church, law didn't help Collopy either. It is silent on financial support for children fathered by priests. Still, several Catholic scholars said religious orders, such as the Redemptorists, should be guided by higher standards when it comes to providing for children. The Redemptorists are an order of missionaries, priests and brothers whose "special mission," according to its website, is "preaching the word of God to the poor."Father John J. Coughlin, a professor at the University of Notre Dame Law School and canon law expert, said it was "customary" for religious orders to provide financial support for the children of its members."Given the special needs" of Collopy's child, who has chronic asthma and allergies, "it would seem that the Redemptorists have a moral obligation to contribute to the child's support … in accord with the order's ability to provide that financial support," Coughlin said.Officials with the Redemptorists' Denver Province could not be reached for comment. Archdiocese of Los Angeles officials said they had not been informed by Uribe or his order about the priest's child until recently. In April, Uribe announced that his order was transferring him to Chicago later this summer.Parishioners at St. Mary also were never told that their pastor had a son."I'm very, very disappointed," said Rene Desmedt of La Habra, when told about the priest's secret child and the support dispute. Desmedt, 84, has served as an usher at St. Mary for 45 years. "I never expected that. When this becomes public, there's going to be very many people really angry."Desmedt said the church collects $12,000 to $13,000 each week from parishioners and that it could support the priest's child."St. Mary's Church is a rich church, in my book," Desmedt said. "We can afford it. Boy, that news is going to knock the heads off a lot of people."Uribe declined to be interviewed but issued a statement."Since [my son's] birth I have taken my obligation of support for him seriously, although as in many such situations this has not been easy because of the strained relationship and lack of contact between the parents," Uribe wrote.No statistics exist on the number of U.S. Catholic priests with children or how those children are supported. But several national support groups provide legal advice and encouragement for women whose children were fathered by priests.
DenverPost.com - LOCAL NEWS: "CIA officials used a sledgehammer handle to beat various prisoners in Iraq, and one official, whose name is classified, would often brag about his abuse of prisoners, according to testimony in a closed session of a military hearing.
The transcript, obtained this week by The Denver Post under a court order, was of a March hearing to determine whether three Fort Carson Army soldiers should stand trial for the death of Iraqi Maj. Gen. Abed Hamed Mowhoush during an interrogation in 2003.
Chief Warrant Officer Jefferson Williams and Spec. Jerry Loper face murder charges in the case.
A third soldier, Sgt. 1st Class William Sommer, has not had final charges approved, though he also was involved in the March preliminary Article 32 hearing.
Chief Warrant Officer Lewis Welshofer waived his hearing but is charged with murder. "
Military's Opposition to Harsh Interrogation Is Outlined - New York Times

Senior military lawyers lodged vigorous and detailed dissents in early 2003 as an administration legal task force concluded that President Bush had authority as commander in chief to order harsh interrogations of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, newly disclosed documents show.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Who's Taking Blame for Christian Violence? So where are the Christian leaders when it comes to violent actions by our Western leaders? Where are the televangelists, who every Sunday take over the airwaves to trumpet the message of Jesus, when it comes to taking on bunker busting bombs and mass carnage?

Where are they when it comes to the death penalty prevalent in the majority of American states?

When President George Bush insists that billions of dollars need to continue flowing to the war effort in Iraq which leads to more American body bags and Iraqi graves, why is there no outcry? Why don't the Christian leaders stand up and challenge those decisions, and passionately assert that Jesus would have sought another way of solving the problems?

In this time when Christianity is on the rise all over America, when there is a growing surge in extolling Christian values, why is it that when the born-again Bush says it's better to fight "them" over there than on American soil, no concerted group of leaders stands up and yells that he's got it wrong?

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

extreme Catholic SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) -- A Roman Catholic priest and expert on church law who co-wrote a document on dealing with sexually abusive priests has been charged with molesting a boy more than 30 years ago.

A criminal complaint was filed May 12 against the Rev. Gregory Ingels, who until recently was a priest at St. Bartholomew Church in San Mateo.

Ingels, 60, was charged with engaging in sexual conduct with a 15-year-old boy in 1972, two years before Ingels was ordained. Ingels was teaching at a Catholic high school in Marin County at the time, and the boy was his student.

According to the complaint, Ingels made incriminating comments in recent conversations with the victim that were tape-recorded by police.

Ingels could get eight years in prison.

Ingels was one of four experts chosen to draft a legal interpretation of the "zero tolerance" policy adopted last year by the nation's Catholic bishops toward child-molesting priests. The guide, published in March, offered recommendations on how the policy could be implemented.

It could have been worse, they could have made this priest a bishop. News items like this sometimes create a sort of credibility for the claims that the priesthood in the United States is 40-60% homosexual.